Dan York's book clearly explaining Unified Communications security and the strategies you should follow to secure your systems

Reviews

11/02/2012

Do you have an account on Goodreads? If so, there is a page for Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks with a very kind review from Alan Johnston. As an author, I'd naturally like to have some more reviews as they do tend to help people understand what people think about the book.

If you found the book helpful, could you please take a moment to review (or at least "star") the book there?

Even if you don't want to post a review right now, if you are on Goodreads and can add the book to a "shelf" that would also be helpful, as others will then see that people are reading the book.

Thanks again for the continued support and for the positive comments I continue to receive about the book. I'm very pleased that people have found it helpful and that we can continue to have a healthy dialog about communications security issues.

I greatly appreciate the reviews from both Mario and Alan because reviews definitely do matter ... and do influence buying behavior.

To that end, if you have read Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks, would you please consider writing a review on Amazon.com? It would be great if more readers did. (Thanks in advance if you do.)

04/02/2011

I admit that I never get tired of meeting face-to-face with people who have read the Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks and I enjoy particularly meeting with those folks who have taken the time out of their busy lives to write up a review of my book. I do read all the reviews I find about the book, figuring that I can always learn from what others say. So far I've been quite pleased and humbled by the positive reviews the book has received to date.

As I mentioned previously, though, I was quite surprised by one review headline entitled "Offal Is Not Awful, and the Seven Deadliest Attacks" and could honestly not even remotely figure out what my book had to do with offal (and it turned out to have nothing to do with it).

When I was down in Miami earlier this year for the ITEXPO conference, I had a chance to meet the reviewer in question, David Byrd of Broadsoft, and naturally I asked if he minded a picture being taken (he didn't):

It turns out, of course, that there was no connection whatsoever... but the author of the post, David Byrd of Broadsoft, seems to start many of his posts off talking about food! (Other examples here, here and here.) Hey, we all have our own style... :-)

Thanks, David, for the mention of the book, and for providing a chuckle with your headline. I have to say I would have never come up with the combination. I'll be curious to see what the headline may be for his follow-up post he mentions for Wednesday...

I definitely do appreciate any and all Amazon reviews - people do read those reviews and they do influence sales. If you have read the book, would you mind taking a moment and adding a review at Amazon.com? (Thanks)